
CareLab: Kyle Bass
Playwright, Assistant Professor of Theater, Colgate University, and Resident Playwright, Syracuse Stage
- About the Mudd Center
- People
-
Programs and Events
- 2025-2026: Taking Place: Land Use and Environmental Impact
- 2024-2025: How We Live and Die: Stories, Values, and Communities
- 2023-2024: Ethics of Design
-
2022-2023: Beneficence: Practicing an Ethics of Care
- Karen Stohr
- Helen Y. Weng
- Oscar Jerome Stewart
- John Lysaker
- Seema Gajwani
- Lynn Chin
- Richard Weissbourd
- CareLab: Ross Gay
- CareLab Pet Project
- CareLab: Ethics of Care Meditation Circle led by Anthony DeMauro
- CareLab: Megan Mueller
- CareLab: Kyle Bass
- CareLab: C茅line Leboeuf
- CareLab: Fostering Care in Rockbridge County Schools
- 2021-2022: Daily Ethics: How Individual Choices and Habits Express Our Values and Shape Our World
- 2020-2021: Global Ethics in the 21st Century: Challenges and Opportunities
- 2019-2020: The Ethics of Technology
- 2018-2019: The Ethics of Identity
- 2017-2018: Equality and Difference
- 2016-2017: Markets and Morals
- 2015-2016: The Ethics of Citizenship
- 2014-2015: Race and Justice in America
- Leadership Lab
- Mudd Undergraduate Journal of Ethics
-
Highlights
- Mudd Center Fellows Program
- Get Involved
CareLab Public Event Title: Screening of Citizen James and Playwright’s Talk: Conflict & Care: A Dramaturgy of Harm and Hope
Mudd Center Partnership with the Department of Theater, Dance, and Film Studies and the Office of Inclusion and Engagement
Tuesday, February 14, 2023, 5:00-7:30 pm, Stackhouse Theater
CareLab events are designed to personalize our exploration of beneficence. If we aspire to practice an ethics of care, how can we learn to manifest this value in our thoughts and actions?

Kyle Bass
Kyle Bass’s recent plays portray complex characters within specific historical contexts. He is interested in depicting truths of the past that resonate with our now. His play Citizen James is a one-man show on James Baldwin. The play was commissioned by Syracuse Stage, where Bass was the inaugural resident playwright, and it streamed nationally in 2021.
Through a NYSCA Individual Artist Grant, Professor Bass is currently under commission by Franklin Stage company for a new play titled Wakeman & Toliver. This play is set during the American Civil War and theatricalizes the experiences of two people from different (and not so different) backgrounds. Wakeman of the title was Sarah Rosetta Wakeman, a young white woman born in rural Upstate New York who disguised herself as a man and mustered into the Union Army, the 153rd New York State Volunteers, as Lyons Wakeman. Toliver was a young black man born into slavery in Virginia who escaped to New York, changed his name to avoid capture, and mustered into the Union Army’s 26th Regiment of Colored Troops (NY). Toliver was/is Professor Bass’s great-great-grandfather. While based in fact, the play is a work of dramatic fiction, the preferred form for considering truths.
Professor Bass’s drama Tender Rain will receive its world premiere in Syracuse Stage’s 22-23 season. Among many other full-length plays, Professor Bass wrote Possessing Harriet, which was commissioned by the Onondaga Historical Association, premiered at Syracuse Stage in 2018 and was published by Standing Stone Books. His libretto for Libba Cotten: Here This Day, a new opera based on the life of American folk music legend Libba Cotten, was commissioned by The Society for New Music and premiered in 2021.
With National Medal of Arts recipient Ping Chong, Professor Bass is the co-author of Cry for Peace: Voices from the Congo, which premiered at Syracuse Stage and was subsequently produced at La MaMa Experimental Theatre in New York City. He is the co-author of the original screenplay for the film Day of Days (Broad Green Pictures, 2017), which stars award-winning veteran actor Tom Skerritt. He was the script consultant on Thoughts of a Colored Man, which premiered at Syracuse Stage in 2019 and opened on Broadway in 2021. He worked as dramaturg with acclaimed visual artist and MacArthur Fellow Carrie Mae Weems on her theatre piece Grace Notes: Reflections for Now.
Before joining the Department of Theater, Professor Bass served as the Burke Endowed Chair for Regional Studies at Colgate University. Previously, he was a faculty member at Goddard College, Syracuse University, and Hobart & William Smith Colleges. He was the 2019/20 Susan P. Stroman Visiting Playwright at the University of Delaware.
Professor Bass is a three-time recipient of the New York Foundation for the Arts (NYFA) Fellowship (for fiction in 1998, for playwriting in 2010, and for screenwriting in 2022) and was a finalist for the Princess Grace Playwriting Award and a nominee for the Pushcart Prize.
He holds a MFA in playwriting from Goddard College and a BA in English with a concentration in Creative Writing from the State University of New York at Fredonia.
- About the Mudd Center
- People
-
Programs and Events
- 2025-2026: Taking Place: Land Use and Environmental Impact
- 2024-2025: How We Live and Die: Stories, Values, and Communities
- 2023-2024: Ethics of Design
-
2022-2023: Beneficence: Practicing an Ethics of Care
- Karen Stohr
- Helen Y. Weng
- Oscar Jerome Stewart
- John Lysaker
- Seema Gajwani
- Lynn Chin
- Richard Weissbourd
- CareLab: Ross Gay
- CareLab Pet Project
- CareLab: Ethics of Care Meditation Circle led by Anthony DeMauro
- CareLab: Megan Mueller
- CareLab: Kyle Bass
- CareLab: C茅line Leboeuf
- CareLab: Fostering Care in Rockbridge County Schools
- 2021-2022: Daily Ethics: How Individual Choices and Habits Express Our Values and Shape Our World
- 2020-2021: Global Ethics in the 21st Century: Challenges and Opportunities
- 2019-2020: The Ethics of Technology
- 2018-2019: The Ethics of Identity
- 2017-2018: Equality and Difference
- 2016-2017: Markets and Morals
- 2015-2016: The Ethics of Citizenship
- 2014-2015: Race and Justice in America
- Leadership Lab
- Mudd Undergraduate Journal of Ethics
- Highlights
- Mudd Center Fellows Program
- Get Involved